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Monday, January 14, 2013

A language and its interpretation - Learning free monads

I have been playing around with free monads of late and finding them more and more useful in implementing separation of concerns between pure data and its interpretation. Monads generally don't compose. But if you restrict monads to a particular form, then you can define a sum type that composes. In the paper Data Types a la carte, Wouter Swierstra describes this form as

data Term f a =
Pure a
| Impure (f (Term f a))

These monads consist of either pure values or an impure effect, constructed using f. When f is a functor, Term f is a monad. And in this case, Term f is the free monad being the left adjoint to the forgetful functor f.

I am not going into the details of what makes a monad free. I once asked this question on google+ and Edward Kmett came up with a beautiful explanation. So instead of trying to come up with a half assed version of the same, have a look at Ed's response here .

In short, we can say that a free monad is the freeest object possible that's still a monad.

Composition

Free monads compose and help you build larger abstractions which are pure data and yet manage to retain all properties of a monad. Hmm .. this sounds interesting because now we can not only build abstractions but make them extensible through composition by clients using the fact that it's still a monad.

A free monad is pure data, not yet interpreted, as we will see shortly. You can pass it to a separate interpreter (possibly multiple interpreters) which can do whatever you feel like with the structure. Your free monad remains pure while all impurities can be put inside your interpreters.

And so we interpret ..

In this post I will describe how I implemented an interpreter for a Joy like concatenative language that uses the stack for its computation. Of course it's just a prototype and addresses an extremely simplified subset, but you get the idea. The basic purpose is to explore the power of free monads and come up with something that can potentially be extended to a full blown implementation of the language.

When designing an interpreter there's always the risk of conflating the language along with the concerns of interpreting it. Here we will have the 2 completely decoupled by designing the core language constructs as free monads. Gabriel Gonzalez has written a series of blog posts [1,2,3] on the use of free monads which contain details of their virtues and usage patterns. My post is just an account of my learning experience. In fact after I wrote the post, I discovered a similar exercise done for embedding Forth in Haskell - so I guess I'm not the first one to learn free monads using a language interpreter.

Let's start with some code, which is basically a snippet of Joy like code that will run within our Haskell interpreter ..

p :: Joy ()
p = do push 5
push 6
add
incr
add2
square
cube
end

This is our wish list and at the end of the post we will see if we can interpret this correctly and reason about some aspects of this code. Let's not bother much about the details of the above snippet. The important point is that if we fire it up in ghci, we will see that it's pure data!

We haven't yet executed anything of the above code. It's completely free to be interpreted and possibly in multiple ways. So, we have achieved this isolation - that the data is freed from the interpreter. You want to develop a pretty printer for this data - go for it. You want to apply semantics and give an execution model based on Joy - do it.

Building the pure data (aka Builder)

The interesting piece is the derivation of the Functor, which is required for implementing the forgetful functor adjoint of the free monad. Keeping the technical mumbo jumbo aside, free monads are just a general way of turning functors into monads. So if we have a core operator f as a functor, we can get a free monad Free f out of it. And knowing something is a free monad helps you transform transform an operation over the monad (the monad homomorphism) into an operation over the functor (functor homomorphism). We will see how this helps later ..

The other point to note is that all operators take a continuation argument that points to the next operation in the chain. End is the terminal symbol and we plan to ignore anything that the user enters after an End.

Push takes an Int and pushes into the stack, Add pops the top 2 elements of the stack and pushes the sum, Mult does the same for multiplication and Dup duplicates the top element of the stack. End signifies the end of program.

Next we define the free monad over JoyOperator by using the Free data constructor, defined as part of Control.Monad.Free ..

data Free f a = Pure a | Free (f (Free f a))

-- | The free monad over JoyOperator
type Joy = Free JoyOperator

And then follow it up with some of the definitions of Joy operators as operations over free monads. Note that liftF lifts an operator (which is a Functor) into the context of a free monad. liftF has the following type ..

liftF :: Functor f => f a -> Free f a

As a property, a free moand has a forgetful functor as its left adjoint. The unlifting from the monad to the functor is given by the retract function ..

runProgram is the interpreter that takes a free monad as its input. Its implementation is quite trivial - it just matches on the recursive structure of the data and pushes the appropriate results on the stack. Now if we run our program p using the above interpreter we get the correct result ..

*Joy> runProgram p
Right 7529536
*Joy>

Equational Reasoning

Being Haskell and being pure, we obviously can prove some bits and pieces of our program as mathematical equations. At the beginning I said that End is the end of the program and anything after End needs to be ignored. What happens if we do the following ..

runProgram $ do {push 5; incr; incr; end; incr; incr}

If you have guessed correctly we get Right 7, which means that all operations after end have been ignored. But can we prove that our program indeed does this ? The following is a proof that end indeed ends our program. Consider some operation m follows end ..

Improving the bind

Free monads offer improved modularity by allowing us to separate the building of pure data from the (possibly) impure concerns of interpreting it with the external world. But a naive implementation leads to a penalty in runtime efficiency as Janis Voigtlander discusses in his paper Asymptotic Improvement of Computations over Free Monads. And the Haskell's implementation of free monads had this inefficiency where the asymptotic complexity of substitution was quadratic because of left associative bind. Edward Kmett implemented the Janis trick and engineered a solution that gets over this inefficiency. I will discuss this in a future post. And if you would like to play around with the interpreter, the source is there in my github.

Every time I come back to haskell I generally spend a few days hammering boilerplate monad instantiation back into my head. I was also unaware that deriving functors was possible. You saved me a few days and then some.